The bizarre history of the Oxford Latin Dictionary

Oxford Latin Dictionary

By Chris Stray

When we are unsure of the meaning of a word, or want to know when it was first used, or what alternative spellings it has, we consult the dictionary. People often refer to “the dictionary,” as if there were only one, or as if it didn’t matter which one was consulted. But then most households probably only have one dictionary of any size, though consultation via computers, tablets, or smartphones is becoming increasingly common. Reference works of this kind hide in the light. They are so obviously present as resources, waiting to be consulted, that we don’t often think about them as topics in their own right. But the history of dictionary-making is as complicated and intriguing as any other history. Once we penetrate the sheer authoritative presence of a dictionary, we often find the human fragility of failures, wrong turns, conflict, and uncertainty.

The Oxford Latin Dictionary (OLD) is no exception to this generalization. A new Latin dictionary was commissioned by Oxford University Press in 1875, but abandoned in the following decade, and an American book by Charlton Lewis and Charles Short adopted instead. Work began on OLD in 1933, but it was not finally published until 1982. Why did it take nearly fifty years to put together? The first editor appointed, Alexander Souter, made slow progress, his sample entries were savaged by the press’s learned advisers, and he was retired in 1939. World War II dispersed the staff and slowed progress to a snail’s pace. Souter’s successor, James Wyllie, was a talented lexicographer but proved difficult to deal with and was dismissed after a mental breakdown in 1954. From then until his death in 1971, Wyllie issued a long series of visionary pamphlets. He was succeeded by Peter Glare, a safe pair of hands, who saw the project through to completion.

Another factor which made for slow progress was that Oxford Latin Dictionary was assembled from scratch, from a fresh reading of Latin texts. In this it followed the strategy of the Oxford English Dictionary, whose main sequence was completed after fifty years of work in 1928. The two dictionaries were also linked as products of the same lexicographical factory, assembled by OUP in the 1880s and housed in the Dictionary Room the Old Ashmolean Museum in Oxford since 1903. (It also housed the team working on the revision of Liddell and Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon, published in parts between 1925 and 1940.) The decision to start work on OLD was in fact motivated in part by a concern to provide employment for the staff of OED after it completed publication. This is a useful reminder that dictionaries are not just reference resources for readers. Their preparation involves large-scale projects and demands considerable investment of time, staff, and money.

The history of dictionary-making is littered with unfinished projects. The roll of books begun but never completed is a long one, and looking at it makes one appreciate how remarkable it was that OED and OLD were completed. In fact in the 1890s, when economic depression reduced the Press’s overall profits and the OED’s costs soared, it came close to being cancelled.

The histories I’ve mentioned are internal ones, but dictionaries are published in a competitive marketplace, and their success or failure depends in part on the nature of the competition. American readers may be familiar with the long-running battles between Noah Webster and Joseph Worcester in the nineteenth century, or between Merriam-Webster and Funk and Wagnall in the twentieth. In both cases, the publication of a massive dictionary by one firm was soon followed by the appearance of a bigger and (allegedly) better book from its rival.

Oxford Latin Dictionary is in the unusual position of having no obvious rival, certainly in English-speaking countries. The same goes for its sister dictionary, Liddell and Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon. ‘Liddell and Scott’ has acquired a lot of stories since its first appearance in 1843. It had two editors, and was known to some users as ‘our two friends’ — though Liddell, when challenged about an entry, was reputed to have replied, “Scott wrote that part.” And of course Liddell was the father of Alice in Wonderland. But the history of the Oxford Latin Dictionary has its own stories, and as new readers engage with it, will surely gain more.

Christopher Stray is Honorary Research Fellow, Dept of Classics, Swansea University, and Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Classical Studies, University of London. He has published on the history and sociology of classical education in schools and universities, book history, examinations and institutional slang. He is currently at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, working on the history of Liddell and Scott’s Greek lexicon.

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Recent Comments

Andrew Dunning15th June 2012

I knew that Lewis and Short were American, but I was not aware of how it had come to be published by Oxford rather than Harper. It would be very interesting to hear more about the history of this book. (And what were these ‘visionary pamphlets’ by Wyllie?)

Now that you have the second edition of the OLD finished, is there any possibility of publishing the digital version? It would be particularly brilliant if you could create a site along the lines of Logeion, integrating all your classical dictionaries: the OLD, Lewis and Short, Liddell and Scott, and Lampe’s Patristic Greek Lexicon, together with the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources once it is complete.

A digital version of the OLD is in the works, along with revised (and eventually digital) versions of many of the titles you mentioned. Now it’s just a matter of time and resources. (We can’t have any more editors driven to madness!)

— Blog Editor Alice

Mirielle3rd February 2013

Can you give an example of an entry in any dictionary that states when this or that lexeme or this or that sense of any lexeme “was first used”?

Reed19th February 2013

Dear Alice,
What splendid news that there will be a digital version of the Oxford Latin Dictionary! Is there anything that you might want an amateur Latinist to do in lending a hand to the effort?

Best regards,

Reed Palmer
Tucson, Arizona
USAl

Vojin29th June 2014

Is there a place where I could find a bare but complete list of entries of the OLD? Thank you.